Ron wrote: > What I had hoped I could do in this case would be simply to remount > the /usr/doc partition as /usr/share/doc and then symlink /usr/doc > to it.. however it was previously indicated that this might cause > problems with dpkg..
The best thing to do is probably to make sure that /usr/doc/ and /usr/share/doc end up on the same filesystem, but in separate directories. Making a symlink from /usr/doc to this filesystem should be no problem. Dpkg was designed to work well with that kind of symlinking (which is why its behaviour is often counterintuitive to us developers). Symlinking /usr/doc directly to /usr/share/doc is likely to break things, though, since dpkg will be moving files from one to the other without realizing that they are the same directory. Richard Braakman

